NOVEL The M.I.L.F Rebate System: Every Woman I Spoil Makes Me Richer! Chapter 25: Robbery?
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Chapter 25: Robbery?

The bell above the door jingled eariler, neither Liam nor Darren looked up.

They were too deep in it—the kind of conversation that peeled back layers neither of them liked to show. Darren had just admitted he didn’t know what he was going to do. Liam had just promised to sit and listen. The coffee was bitter and the booth was cramped and somewhere in the background, a jukebox played a song from the eighties.

"Perfect", Liam thought. "A shitty diner, shitty coffee, and a friend who’s finally being honest."

The man who walked in was unremarkable.

Mid-thirties. Hoodie pulled up despite the heat. Hands in his pockets. He moved like he had been here before—not a regular, but someone who knew the layout. The counter to the left, the bathrooms in the back, and the single exit door near the kitchen.

Flo, the waitress with the beehive hairdo, looked up from the register.

"Take a seat anywhere, hon," she said.

The man didn’t take a seat.

He walked to the counter. Leaned against it with his right hand stayed in his pocket. His left hand rested on the faux-marble surface.

Flo’s smile faltered.

Because she saw it.

Under the counter, below the level of the booths, the man’s right hand emerged from his pocket. And in it was a gun. Black and compact. T

he kind that fit in a waistband or a jacket pocket. He held it low, angled toward her stomach, hidden from everyone except the person standing directly in front of it.

Flo’s blood turned to ice.

Her mouth opened. No sound came out.

"Don’t scream," the man whispered. His voice was soft, almost gentle. "Open the register, nice and slow. And don’t make me ask twice."

Flo’s hands trembled. Her fingers fumbled for the keys as she had worked at this diner for eighteen years. Eighteen years of morning rushes and lunch crowds and old men who ordered the same thing every Tuesday. She had never been robbed before. She didn’t know what to do.

"Just open it", she told herself. "Give him the money. Let him leave."

But her hands wouldn’t cooperate. The keys slipped and clattered against the counter.

The man’s jaw tightened.

"I said slow," he hissed. The gun inched higher.

Across the diner, Darren’s eyes narrowed.

He hadn’t seen the gun, not yet but he had seen Flo’s face. The way her color drained. The way her hands shook and also the way the man at the counter was standing too close, leaning too far, like he was hiding something below the line of sight.

"Something’s wrong", Darren thought.

He didn’t turn his head and didn’t make a sound. He just shifted his eyes toward Liam and murmured, barely moving his lips.

"Don’t move, don’t speak."

Liam’s body went still. He had heard that tone before, Darren wasn’t joking. Darren wasn’t being dramatic and he knew something was happening, and Liam needed to stay exactly where he was.

Darren’s gaze swept the diner.

The other customers were oblivious. A young couple sharing a milkshake in the corner, an old man reading a newspaper and two construction workers arguing about baseball. None of them saw Flo’s terror. None of them saw the way the man’s shoulder was tensed, the way his hoodie bunched around his right arm.

"He’s holding something", Darren realized.

A knife or a gun, it didn’t matter. Whatever it was, Flo was about to get hurt.

Darren raised his hand.

"Hey!" he called out, loud enough to cut through the jukebox. "Can I get another coffee over here? This one tastes like dishwater."

Every head in the diner turned toward him.

The man at the counter turned too.

His eyes locked onto Darren. Irritation flashed across his face—the annoyance of someone whose concentration had been broken, whose rhythm had been disrupted. His right hand, still holding the gun, twitched.

Darren didn’t meet his eyes.

He looked past the man, at the menu board on the wall, at the pies in the glass case, anywhere but directly at the threat. Eye contact would have escalated things. It would have told the man that Darren was a problem to be solved, not a customer to be ignored.

The man kissed his teeth in irritation.

"Tch."

He turned back to Flo. Raised the gun another inch.

And that was when Darren moved.

His legs unfolded from the booth in one explosive motion. Long strides carried him across the diner floor—seven feet, then five, then three. The construction workers looked up, the old man dropped his newspaper, and the young couple’s milkshake froze halfway to her lips.

The man heard the footsteps.

He started to turn, began to raise the gun toward Darren instead of Flo.

He was too slow.

Darren’s left hand slammed down on the counter, palm flat, inches from the man’s wrist. The impact sent a shockwave up the man’s arm. His fingers spasmed. The gun flew out of his grip, spinning through the air, landing behind the counter with a clatter.

Before the man could react, Darren’s right hand grabbed the back of his hoodie. He yanked forward and then downward. The man’s face met the counter with a sickening crack—nose first, then forehead, then the bridge of his cheek.

"AHHH—!"

The scream was muffled by the faux marble.

Darren pinned him there, one hand on the back of his neck, the other pressing his wrist flat against the counter. The man struggled—kicked, twisted, tried to bring his free arm up—but Darren was stronger. He had weight and leverage and the kind of muscle that came from years of fighting when fighting was the only option.

"Don’t," Darren said quietly. "Just don’t."

The man stopped moving.

Flo stared at them both, her mouth agape. Behind the counter, the gun lay on a stack of napkins, harmless now.

"Holy shit," someone whispered.

The young couple’s milkshake finally fell. It hit the floor with a splat, but no one looked.

"Did he have a gun?" the old man with the newspaper asked.

Flo nodded, mute.

The construction workers stood up. One of them pulled out his phone. "I’m calling 911." freёwebnovel.com

"Already on it," said the other.

The diner erupted.

Not in panic—in applause. Clapping and whistling. Someone shouted "Hell yeah!" from the kitchen. Flo leaned against the wall, her legs finally giving out, sliding down until she sat on the floor behind the counter.

Darren looked around, his face flushed.

"I—" He shook his head. "It’s nothing. Really. Someone just get something to tie his hands."

Liam finally moved. He walked over to the counter, stepped behind it, and helped Flo to her feet. She was shaking like a leaf.

"You okay?" Liam asked.

"I think so," she whispered. "I think... I think I need to sit down."

Liam pulled out a stool for her. Then he looked at Darren—really looked at him. There was no surprise on Liam’s face. He had seen Darren fight before. Years ago, outside a bar in college. Three guys, one Darren. The math had worked out the same way.

But a robbery? Right under their noses?

"You knew," Liam said. It wasn’t a question.

Darren shrugged, still holding the man down. "I saw her face. That’s all."

The front door burst open. Two police officers, summoned by someone’s call. They took one look at the scene—Darren pinning a man to the counter, a gun on the floor, a crowd of customers cheering—and drew their weapons.

"Sir, step back from the suspect!"

Darren raised his hands and stepped back.

The man on the counter groaned and didn’t move.

One officer cuffed him, the other picked up the gun. The customers kept clapping. Flo kept shaking. And Liam stood in the middle of it all, watching his best friend get escorted to a booth for a statement.

Darren looked embarrassed, genuinely embarrassed, his ears were red. He kept his eyes on the table, avoiding the admiring glances of the young couple, the construction workers, the old man who was now calling him a hero.

"You didn’t have to do all that," Darren muttered when Liam sat back down.

"Yeah," Liam said. "I know."

He flagged down Flo—who was back on her feet, somehow—and ordered another coffee.

For both of them but Flo told them it was on the house.

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